BY RICH GALEN
Reprinted from Mullings.com
We often hear about a “miscarriage of justice” but rarely a “carriage of justice.” Much as we call people inept, but never say someone is really, really, ept.
Ok, there is no such word as “ept” so that doesn’t count.
The national news corps was all a-twitter – including being ON Twitter – when the jury came back with its not guilty verdict in the George Zimmerman trial for the death of Trayvon Martin. Too many of them expressed everything from disappointment to outright shock at the result.
I understand life is passing me by and the notion of a reporter without an agenda is as outdated as an 8-track player connected to a AM-only radio in a car with bench seats and white walls.
I get that.
But, what I don’t get is a bunch of people who were not in the courtroom, who probably only watched snippets of the coverage on evening cable news programs (if only because they’re supposed to be covering their regular beat like the White House or Congress) deciding that they knew how this was all supposed to turn out, and an acquittal was not it.
None of these people would have been allowed on the jury because they had made up their mind that Zimmerman was guilty before he was even arrested and charged.
Speaking of the jury, the all-woman jury consisted of five Whites and one Hispanic. This, according to Fox News legal analyst Tamara Holder, was fraught with danger because the jury didn’t match the racial makeup of Seminole County and “The George Zimmerman prosecution and defense teams should have considered the potential for such a response in this case, because race was at issue from the outset.”
Everything I know about jury trials I learned from watching Law & Order episodes and covering Municipal Court as a young reporter in Marietta, Ohio 45750. But I know this: A defense attorney that potentially damages his client’s chances for a fair trial by choosing less than the best jurors he can is likely to lose his license.
At the beginning of the trial, Zimmerman’s lawyer, Don West told his infamous knock-knock joke about the difficulty in finding jurors who had not already made up their mind because they’d read and heard so much about the case:
Knock, knock.
Who’s there?
George Zimmerman.
George Zimmerman who?
Alright good, you’re on the jury.
The legal geniuses on the cable chat shows called for West’s head because the jury didn’t laugh.
Now that Zimmerman has been acquitted on the charge of 2nd degree murder, that same crowd is calling for the prosecutors’ collective heads because they couldn’t prove 2nd degree murder.
But, if the State’s Attorneys had chosen to charge Zimmerman with a case they might have been able to prove, manslaughter, they would have been pilloried for not charging him with 2nd degree murder.
The only time I watched any part of this trial (not counting the verdict announcement which I watched only because Fox broke into the Nats-Marlins game to carry it) was while I was on the elevator in my office building.
I work on the 5th floor so we’re talking maybe 15, 20 seconds at a time.
This is why I am opposed to cameras in the courtroom: They add nothing to the administration of justice. Cameras in court only provide fodder for legal voyeurs most of whom have a legal background limited to whining about a parking ticket.
The American legal system is far from perfect. This case is a good example: For the most part the only person who actually knew what happened, George Zimmerman, didn’t testify. The other witnesses testified to what they think they saw or heard or what they wanted to have heard or seen.
In the end there were only six people on the planet who had a say in how the trial was going to come out: The jury.
You and I don’t have to like the result but, we didn’t have a vote.
Neither did the national press corps.
Editor’s Note: Rich Galen is former communications director for House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Senator Dan Quayle. In 2003-2004, he did a six-month tour of duty in Iraq at the request of the White House engaging in public affairs with the Department of Defense. He also served as executive director of GOPAC and served in the private sector with Electronic Data Systems. Rich is a frequent lecturer and appears often as a political expert on ABC, CNN, Fox and other news outlets.